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Tottenham's Ange Postecoglou unworried by 'mentality' of players despite inconsistent Premier League start

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Tottenham have issues, but mentality isn't one of them. That's according to their head coach Ange Postecoglou.

It's been a rollercoaster for Spurs fans since the start of this season. Thumping statement victories at Manchester United and against Champions League rivals Aston Villa have been punctured by miserable losses to lowly Crystal Palace and Ipswich - handing both clubs their first Premier League wins in the process.

Spurs' consistency this season lies in their inconsistency. It's never dull. They either win or they lose. Five league wins have been paired with five league defeats since their opening-weekend draw at promoted Leicester City.

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But whilst Postecoglou understands the question marks around the psychological state of his squad, he doesn't buy into the narrative.

"I don't worry about the mentality of the squad or the other areas that people tend to focus on," he tells Sky Sports ahead of Saturday's trip to Manchester City. "What I'm looking at is how we grow from our experiences. And those experiences - as painful as they were and are - I still think we'll get growth out of them".

Growth is a recurring theme as the Australian sits down with Sky Sports News ahead of his 50th Premier League match in charge - a meeting with the champions Manchester City at the Etihad.

In November last year, Tottenham sat on top of the Premier League table after his first 10 games in charge. Yet a damaging defeat to Chelsea, with red cards and injuries hitting his squad, was the starting point for a see-saw campaign. A dramatic decline in spring ended any hopes of Champions League qualification. Spurs now sit 10th heading into a busy programme of fixtures.

But Postecoglou is bullish about what has been achieved over the course of his previous 49 league games.

"From where we started, I think the first 50 games, if you think of it as a totality, I think we've made really, really good progress considering our starting point, which was finishing eighth in the league," he said. "That was our starting point. I didn't come to a club that finished first.

"I think we have shown we've made progress and it's also shown we've still got a long way to go."

Perhaps context is therefore required. Postecoglou took over a club who were reeling following Antonio Conte's exit - with the Italian taking a swipe at the club's ownership and overall direction over the previous 20 years before then departing.

However, the 'Spursy' tag continues to be levelled at this group. It's a label they can't seem to shake. It will take another 50 Premier League matches and maybe more for Postecoglou to ensure his side are looked at through a different prism than a team who, despite highs of a Champions League final and regular top-four finishes, have failed to win silverware since 2008.

His target is to separate the past and the future. Yet criticism has been unavoidable since the 2-1 home defeat to promoted Ipswich just before the international break. And the issue of inconsistency is a difficult one to explain or to solve.

"Some of it is where we are at as a club at the moment," he said. "We're still learning to deal with certain things. It's just part of our growth. The results aside - because the results can disguise things - the reality is that our performances have been inconsistent which is the thing we need to address.

"We've been really good this year when we have been good. And we've been really poor when we haven't. We need to make sure we always get a consistent level."

Despite injury concerns at the back, Tottenham have the perfect stage to respond at the home of the champions this weekend. Spurs have already dumped Manchester City out of the Carabao Cup this season - the first defeat in a run of four for Pep Guardiola's side.

Tottenham have enjoyed success at The Etihad in the past, but Guardiola's contract extension, confirmed this week, seems an inevitable catalyst to guide the Citizens out of their challenging patch.

Guardiola's new deal will most likely see him complete 11 years in sky blue. And whilst Postecoglou isn't looking that far ahead, his mindset is to remain in north London to oversee a period of "sustained success" in the future.

"It's unlikely I'll be here for a decade, but I think you have to think that way," he said. "I think it's the only way you get on a road where you understand exactly how you're going to get to that destination of sustained success, which is what we all want - particularly for a club like this which hasn't had a great deal of it.

"You don't want to a peak, you want a sustained period. So that takes time and that's what we are trying to build.

"Certainly every decision I've made is on the back of what's going to give us that platform to say that over a period of X years, we're going to be in a position to challenge for everything".

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Man City: Pep Guardiola's side face Tottenham and Liverpool in season-defining run of fixtures

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"I won't give up, that's for sure," said Pep Guardiola prior to his Manchester City side suffering their fourth defeat in a row against Brighton, and he has reinforced that determination by agreeing a new one-year deal at the club.

It was a tone that has rarely been associated with the City boss since arriving in English football back in 2016, but this is new-found territory for him.

This run of four games is the longest stretch he has gone without a win across his managerial career - and it is not set to get any easier.

City's immediate fixture list in the Premier League is one of the hardest and it could not arrive at a worse time, as Guardiola's side continue to struggle with injuries and confidence.

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However, their boss appears more determined than ever to guide his side through the storm after putting pen-to-paper on a fresh deal, which is certain to give his team a well-needed boost ahead of the potentially season-defining run of games.

City's run of fixtures

A defeat to Tottenham kick-started the hysteria, as goals from Timo Werner and Pape Matar Sarr caused City to crash out of the Carabao Cup.

They will now be tasked with addressing this slump against Ange Postecoglou's team, live on Sky Sports, once domestic action returns on November 23.

A blockbuster clash against league leaders Liverpool, also live on Sky Sports, will follow shortly after and Guardiola will hope to have the likes of Jack Grealish, Ruben Dias and John Stones back for that game on December 1.

City will then host Nottingham Forest, who have been one of the stand-out storylines across the early stages of the season given their impressive start, at the Etihad Stadium on December 4.

A trip to Selhurst Park to face Crystal Palace three days later (December 7) looks the easiest fixture on paper, although the Eagles have caused City problems in recent years.

This of course includes the shock 2-0 victory away from home back in 2021, which will likely linger in the mind of the City boss if his side are in need of a win when the fixture arrives.

Finally, they will finish in dramatic fashion by hosting Ruben Amorim, who will have been in the job over a month by December 15, and Manchester United - live on Sky Sports.

Their rivals are currently an unknown entity but the fear of losing the derby will only mount more pressure on addressing their poor form before a fixture of this magnitude comes around.

The importance of this run laid bare

In terms of league position, City's run is only the eighth-hardest fixture list during the next five games.

However, this does not take into account the club also balancing Champions League matches against Feyenoord (November 26) and Juventus (December 11), as well as the added pressure that will compound with each fixture.

Tottenham, Feyenoord and Liverpool all carry huge importance for City and it is not beyond the realms of possibility that this losing streak extends to seven games before facing Forest.

Liverpool face Southampton in their first fixture after the break and if they go on to secure all three points and City lose their first game back, it would equal the largest points gap that has ever been overcome by Premier League champions after 11 games.

If that margin is stretched to 11 points after facing the Reds, the situation would be teetering on untenable.

Why are City struggling?

Injuries, injuries and injuries.

Winger Jeremy Doku has joined a growing list of key players currently sidelined.

Rodri is the biggest absence but in Grealish, Stones, Dias and Oscar Bobb, Guardiola is lacking crucial depth that he can call upon from the bench.

Only Everton have made less substitutions than City's tally of 35 so far this season, which could highlight why the squad are currently faltering given their lack of fresh legs.

Guardiola has begun to lean on young prospects more frequently, such as 19-year-old Jahmai Simpson-Pusey who has started the last two games in the absence of his injured stars, and might need to do so regularly in the future.

Replacing Rodri

One player that will not be returning in the near future is Rodri.

"Now the seasons are getting longer and the [FIFA Club] World Cup ends on July 13, I have in mind to return this year, as a challenge," said Rodri, speaking on COPE.

"I've already started walking and I'm feeling better than I thought."

Despite the positive update, if City are to address their current issues, they need to find someone who can fill the void left by Rodri in midfield immediately.

Mateo Kovacic and Ilkay Gundogan have been used in the holding role during the run of defeats and alternative candidates may now be considered.

Stones has previously been utilised in midfield and if he is fully fit, could be a viable option to add more protection to the back four.

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Dejan Kulusevski exclusive interview: Tottenham's new leader and Man City's tormentor growing up and aiming high

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Saturday’s clash with Manchester City looks a daunting prospect for Tottenham without the suspended Rodrigo Bentancur and with injuries to Cristian Romero and Micky van de Ven. But Dejan Kulusevski has a different perspective on what lies ahead.

"My favourite game of the year," he smiles to Sky Sports. And no wonder. Having scored in all three of his visits to the Etihad Stadium and set up both goals in last month's home win in the Carabao Cup, few players can claim to have posed Pep Guardiola more problems.

"I have such good memories from there," adds Kulusevski. "I know they are the best. I know they have been winning the Champions League and the Premier League for many years.

"But it's where I come alive. I feel my body differently in those games. I feel super confident, knowing before the game that I will give a big performance. I just let God do his work. Even if there are five minutes left, I don't panic. I know it can happen in the last second.

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"I really love to play the best teams."

His equaliser in the 90th minute of last season's 3-3 draw, during which he also assisted Heung-Min Son's opener, came after a run of three losses. A year on, Spurs return in similar circumstances, defeat to Ipswich having left players and manager under scrutiny.

The 2-1 reverse was Tottenham's fifth in 11 Premier League games this season. Speaking in a meeting room at the club's headquarters following his return from international duty with Sweden, Kulusevski does not shy away from addressing the issues as he sees them.

"I think there are a couple of factors and one is here inside the training ground," he says. "To be a champion, you have to be a champion every day. You have to give everything every day.

"I feel we lack a little bit of discipline in terms of that consistency. That's what is missing. The quality is there, the football is there. But you have to do it every day. You can't be happy because you win a game, two games, three games. You have to win every game.

"I think these are the steps that we have to take. We have the football, but we have to get more disciplined. Maybe someone else has a different opinion, but that is mine."

Ange Postecoglou's devotion to his way of playing remains a subject of debate among supporters but it suits Kulusevski. The 24-year-old has excelled this season, even as others have struggled.

"It's been very nice to get to know him," he says of Postecoglou.

"I think he's a very good man and a very good coach. I have learned a lot from him and I agree with his playing style. That's the way I want to play, very aggressive and always the same.

"But of course, we have to improve. What we are doing is not enough. We can see progress in our football but we want to win something this year and we have to see results too.

"It's a challenge for us together - the manager, the players, everyone at the club - to find a way that works. A lot of things we do are perfect. Offensively, we are very good. But we have to defend a little bit better, especially conceding some easy goals from crosses.

"We have to improve a lot on that, but I think we can fix that side of our game and I am enjoying working with the manager.

"It's an honour for me to work with him."

'I am back in my role in midfield'

The manager has helped get the best out of Kulusevski this season by moving him from the right wing into midfield, the position in which he began his career and one he relishes. Postecoglou says he is "more engaged" when he is "constantly involved". Kulusevski agrees.

"I've been playing as a winger for the last couple of years, but I've never been a winger, and now I've come back to where I started.

"When I was young, I always played in this role, especially at Atalanta in Italy. That's where I played as one of the three midfielders.

"I did really well as a winger for a couple of years and developed a lot of things in that position. But now I go back to my role."

It comes with freedom to roam - Kulusevski pops up everywhere, encouraged to drift - but also higher expectations.

"I think it was time for that," he explains. "It was time to take the next level, because I also matured mentally, so now I know that when I play in this position, I have to make a difference.

"I get a lot of freedom there. That's very important to me. But with freedom comes responsibility. So, now, in every game, I know I have to make the team score.

"A lot of it is instinctive. That's the way I have played all my life and it means every game can be different.

"Sometimes you will see me more on the right, sometimes you will see me more on the left. It's nothing planned, it's just about deciding what is best for the team at any second."

His impact has been profound, keeping James Maddison out of the side and placing him among the best performers in the division statistically. Kulusevski ranks top for chances created. He is in the top 10 for both touches in, and passes into, the opposition box.

He has excelled off the ball too, winning possession in the final third more times than any other player and throwing himself into the task of hustling and harrying opposition midfielders.

"I actually enjoy that side of it a lot," he smiles. "Every young player hates to defend. We only want to play with the ball. But I started to love defending when I was a kid.

"When I play in this position, I am usually up against a guy who plays as a No 6, and for me it's personal not to let him touch the ball. I find that challenge really fun.

"I learned it in Italy. When I was at Juventus, sometimes they played me just to mark the No 6. 'Don't let him touch the ball.' All of that. Physically, I can do it, and I enjoy it.

"I try to kill you not only with the ball, but also without the ball. In basketball, you have to do both parts. The best players are also the best defenders. It's not quite the same in football, but that is what I want to do. I want to do both parts of the game as well as possible."

Kulusevski has been helped in the process of readjusting to the off-the-ball demands of playing in midfield by his incredible stamina and running power. Since the 2019/20 season, only a handful of players have covered ground at a higher rate than his 12km per 90 minutes.

"I think part of it is mental," he explains. "But it is also genetics. When we do physical tests at the club, they always see that I have a very strong heart, so I imagine that helps me a lot.

"As soon as I get one minute of recovery time, it just fuels me up to go again. I just need to recover for a little bit, and then I have all my stamina back quite fast.

"Also, I work very hard, so I think it's a combination of those three things. In football, it's so important because the pitch is so big.

"If you can play for 90 minutes without being tired, it helps so much. It's a huge part of my game and a huge part of my life."

'If I'm not the No 1, I'm not doing enough'

The plan for his move back into midfield was agreed with Postecoglou towards the end of last season. Kulusevski, as relentless in his pursuit of self-improvement as he is on the pitch, used the summer months to prepare himself, physically but also mentally.

"I started doing very different work in the gym and started training even harder than before," he explains. "I took a lot of strength from that training, but I also worked on the mental side.

"I matured. I started focusing on the things I need to focus on, all the time. Think positively. Don't see it as bigger than it is, because it's just football and it's the best thing in life.

"Pressure should not exist in football. It's just doing the thing that you love. Pressure is something for real life. It's for parents who have to send their kids away and things like that.

"So, I just try to focus on football as something fun and try to be the best I can every day, all the time looking for knowledge, asking questions and learning from great players I have played with."

The work done during the most recent off-season was extensive but not unusual for Kulusevski.

"I always have to do that, because I'm a football nerd and I love this sport," he says. "I feel like have this God-given talent and I have to do everything I can to make the most of it.

"I don't want to throw it away and I don't like not being a winner. I don't like not being the No 1. If I'm not being the No 1, then, in my head, I'm not doing enough.

"So, in the summer, yes, I'm having fun, but I'm always thinking about what has to change to make me better and stronger, to become more dangerous.

"Every year you learn new things and you get new experiences. I always try to see what I am lacking and where I want to be, and then I just train harder on what is missing from my game."

The arrival of his daughter, Leonie, in April has given him a new perspective as well as fresh motivation. "It has helped me a lot," he says. "When you have a daughter, your courage just goes up.

"You can't be thinking about stupid things anymore because you have a daughter who looks up to you and you want to be her superhero. I play every game for her. I want her to know that her father is the best, that her father is doing everything he can for her."

Becoming the best has long been Kulusevski's footballing ambition. Recent evidence suggests he is getting closer but he knows what is required to achieve the status he craves.

"Consistency," he says. "I think it's the hardest thing in football, every day, every game. But this season has been much better. I can't remember having a bad game.

"I have been much more consistent, much better, and I think the last step for me to be up there is to score goals in every game.

"I have to be more dangerous. I think I'm there already in terms of key passes. The passing has been there for the last few years. I just need that last step.

"I have to work a lot on my shooting, and on shooting a lot more, to try to be as dangerous as possible. I think, if I can, I have to double or triple my goal totals every year. After that, we can really talk about me being at the kind of level I want to be."

'My leadership style is very, very positive'

Spending time in Kulusevski's company, it is easy to see how he has emerged as a leader, captaining Sweden at the age of only 24 and becoming an example to his team-mates at Spurs.

"It's going really well," he says. "I have always been one of the youngest players but it's different now. I've never been captain before, but now, suddenly, I'm captaining my country.

"It's a huge responsibility and I'm taking much more responsibility here too. I have to keep learning myself, of course. But I'm up for being a leader, because I know I have to help."

Part of his leadership role at Spurs involves mentoring his young countryman Lucas Bergvall, an £8.5m signing from Djurgarden earlier this year who was wanted by a host of top clubs.

"It's fun for me to give him all the tools to get as good as possible," says Kulusevski. "I had great mentors in my life, like my father and all the players that took care of me. It's thanks to them that I learned so much. Now, I am one of them, trying to help young players.

"I'm starting to figure it out. I see how I can affect people with my energy, with my words, and by pushing the right buttons. My style is very, very positive. I don't care how it's going, I just want you to do your best and try to be free, without putting any doors in your way.

"I just try to help, always. I try never to be negative, or scream at them. I don't believe in things like that. I believe in making a player feel comfortable, and then pushing from there.

"Of course, this is only the beginning. I want to win more games and have more points. We all know we have to improve. I don't say I have all the answers, but together I think we can do good things."

It is a message worth heeding as Dejan Kulusevski, Manchester City's tormentor, aims to lead the way again for Spurs at the Etihad Stadium.

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Tottenham appeal Rodrigo Bentancur ban: Ange Postecoglou backs midfielder and calls Uruguayan 'unbelievable team-mate'

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Tottenham boss Ange Postecoglou has called "outstanding person" Rodrigo Bentancur an "unbelievable team-mate" and supported Spurs' decision to appeal the length of his seven-match suspension for a racist remark about captain Heung-Min Son.

Bentancur has been sanctioned over comments he made in an interview aired on Uruguayan TV in June.

The 27-year-old was also fined £100,000 by the Football Association as part of the punishment.

Bentancur handed seven-game ban for Son remarks

Tottenham fixtures: Which games will Rodrigo Bentancur miss?

Spurs said in a statement that they "accept the guilty finding" against Bentancur, but "believe the subsequent sanction is severe".

When asked how big a blow Bentancur's absence would be, Postecoglou said during an exclusive interview with Sky Sports: "It's disappointing because he's been great for us this year.

"He's one of the ones whose football has gone up a level. But we understood this was kind of coming and there was an acceptance from everyone that whatever the sort of penalties were… I fully support the club's decision to appeal the severity of the ban, but ultimately we know it's going to be for X number of games.

"We will work with Rodrigo through that and make sure within that time he has all our support in all the right ways so when he is available again he's ready to go.

"I haven't spoken to him since it came out. He's been away with Uruguay and he's not quite back yet. I'd spoken to him in the lead-up to it. As I said at the time, he understands he has made a mistake, he's prepared to accept whatever penalty comes his way and we as a club are going to support him.

"The one thing that's undeniable to me, because I know him, is he's an outstanding person. He's an unbelievable team-mate. He's a person of the upmost character that has made a mistake. I think when that happens our role is to support him in any way we can."

The former Juventus midfielder was asked to show the shirt of a Spurs player and replied: "Sonny's? It could be Sonny's cousin too as they all look the same."

While an apology from Bentancur was swiftly forthcoming, due to this being an "aggravated breach", an independent regulatory commission panel were required to either uphold the FA charge or dismiss the case.

Son said he and Bentancur remained "brothers" and "nothing had changed" after the Uruguayan immediately apologised to him, admitting he had "made a mistake".

Sky Sports News have contacted Kick It Out for a response to Postecoglou's comments.

Spurs' next seven domestic fixtures

November 23: Manchester City (a) - live on Sky Sports

December 1: Fulham (h)

December 5: Bournemouth (a)

December 8: Chelsea (h) - live on Sky Sports

December 15: Southampton (a)

December 19: Manchester United (h) - live on Sky Sports, Carabao Cup quarter-final

December 22: Liverpool (h) - live on Sky Sports

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Tottenham appeal Rodrigo Bentancur ban: Ange Postecoglou backs midfielder and calls Uruguayan 'unbelievable team-mate'

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Tottenham boss Ange Postecoglou has called "outstanding person" Rodrigo Bentancur an "unbelievable team-mate" and supported Spurs' decision to appeal the length of his seven-match suspension for a racist remark about captain Heung-Min Son.

Bentancur has been sanctioned over comments he made in an interview aired on Uruguayan TV in June.

The 27-year-old was also fined £100,000 by the Football Association as part of the punishment.

Bentancur handed seven-game ban for Son remarks

Tottenham fixtures: Which games will Rodrigo Bentancur miss?

Spurs said in a statement that they "accept the guilty finding" against Bentancur, but "believe the subsequent sanction is severe".

When asked how big a blow Bentancur's absence would be, Postecoglou said during an exclusive interview with Sky Sports: "It's disappointing because he's been great for us this year.

"He's one of the ones whose football has gone up a level. But we understood this was kind of coming and there was an acceptance from everyone that whatever the sort of penalties were… I fully support the club's decision to appeal the severity of the ban, but ultimately we know it's going to be for X number of games.

"We will work with Rodrigo through that and make sure within that time he has all our support in all the right ways so when he is available again he's ready to go.

"I haven't spoken to him since it came out. He's been away with Uruguay and he's not quite back yet. I'd spoken to him in the lead-up to it. As I said at the time, he understands he has made a mistake, he's prepared to accept whatever penalty comes his way and we as a club are going to support him.

"The one thing that's undeniable to me, because I know him, is he's an outstanding person. He's an unbelievable team-mate. He's a person of the upmost character that has made a mistake. I think when that happens our role is to support him in any way we can."

The former Juventus midfielder was asked to show the shirt of a Spurs player and replied: "Sonny's? It could be Sonny's cousin too as they all look the same."

While an apology from Bentancur was swiftly forthcoming, due to this being an "aggravated breach", an independent regulatory commission panel were required to either uphold the FA charge or dismiss the case.

Son said he and Bentancur remained "brothers" and "nothing had changed" after the Uruguayan immediately apologised to him, admitting he had "made a mistake".

Spurs' next seven domestic fixtures

November 23: Manchester City (a) - live on Sky Sports

December 1: Fulham (h)

December 5: Bournemouth (a)

December 8: Chelsea (h) - live on Sky Sports

December 15: Southampton (a)

December 19: Manchester United (h) - live on Sky Sports, Carabao Cup quarter-final

December 22: Liverpool (h) - live on Sky Sports

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Rodrigo Bentancur: Tottenham appeal against length of midfielder's ban for Heung-Min Son remark

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Tottenham have appealed against the length of Rodrigo Bentancur's seven-match suspension for a racist remark made about team-mate Heung-Min Son in a TV interview.

The 27-year-old was also fined £100,000 by the Football Association as part of the punishment.

Spurs said in a statement that they "accept the guilty finding" against Bentancur, but "believe the subsequent sanction is severe".

His domestic suspension will remain in place while the appeal is heard, Spurs added.

Bentancur has been sanctioned over comments he made in an interview aired on Uruguayan TV in June.

Tottenham fixtures: Which games will Rodrigo Bentancur miss?

The former Juventus midfielder was asked to show the shirt of a Spurs player and replied: "Sonny's? It could be Sonny's cousin too as they all look the same."

While an apology from Bentancur was swiftly forthcoming, due to this being an "aggravated breach", an independent regulatory commission panel were required to either uphold the FA charge or dismiss the case.

Son said he and Bentancur remained "brothers" and "nothing had changed" after the Uruguayan immediately apologised to him, admitting he had "made a mistake".

Tottenham travel to Manchester City next on Saturday November 23, live on Sky Sports.

What Kick It Out said on Bentancur's ban

A spokesperson for Kick It Out, an anti-discrimination body in football, welcomed the punishment on Bentancur.

Speaking to Sky Sports News, they said: "We welcome today's decision to hold Rodrigo Bentancur accountable for using a racial slur.

"A significant number of reports were made to Kick It Out regarding the incident at the time, highlighting how abuse directed at players from East and Southeast Asian backgrounds not only impacts the individuals involved but also affects fans in the wider community."

Spurs' next seven domestic fixtures

November 23: Manchester City (a) - live on Sky Sports

December 1: Fulham (h)

December 5: Bournemouth (a)

December 8: Chelsea (h) - live on Sky Sports

December 15: Southampton (a)

December 19: Manchester United (h) - live on Sky Sports, Carabao Cup quarter-final

December 22: Liverpool (h) - live on Sky Sports

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Rodrigo Bentancur: Tottenham set to appeal against length of midfielder's ban for Heung-Min Son remark

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Tottenham are expected to appeal against Rodrigo Bentancur's seven-match suspension for a racist remark made about team-mate Heung-Min Son in a TV interview.

Spurs are understood to be appealing the length of the Football Association ban rather than the verdict. The 27-year-old was also fined £100,000.

Bentancur has been sanctioned over comments he made in an interview aired on Uruguayan TV in June.

Tottenham fixtures: Which games will Rodrigo Bentancur miss?

The former Juventus midfielder was asked to show the shirt of a Spurs player and replied: "Sonny's? It could be Sonny's cousin too as they all look the same."

While an apology from Bentancur was swiftly forthcoming, due to this being an "aggravated breach", an independent regulatory commission panel were required to either uphold the FA charge or dismiss the case.

Son said he and Bentancur remained "brothers" and "nothing had changed" after the Uruguayan immediately apologised to him, admitting he had "made a mistake".

Tottenham travel to Manchester City next on Saturday November 23, live on Sky Sports.

What Kick It Out said on Bentancur's ban

A spokesperson for Kick It Out, an anti-discrimination body in football, welcomed the punishment on Bentancur.

Speaking to Sky Sports News, they said: "We welcome today's decision to hold Rodrigo Bentancur accountable for using a racial slur.

"A significant number of reports were made to Kick It Out regarding the incident at the time, highlighting how abuse directed at players from East and Southeast Asian backgrounds not only impacts the individuals involved but also affects fans in the wider community."

Spurs' next seven domestic fixtures

November 23: Manchester City (a) - live on Sky Sports

December 1: Fulham (h)

December 5: Bournemouth (a)

December 8: Chelsea (h) - live on Sky Sports

December 15: Southampton (a)

December 19: Manchester United (h) - live on Sky Sports, Carabao Cup quarter-final

December 22: Liverpool (h) - live on Sky Sports

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